âMonster of the Weekâ refers to an episode in a season of television that is more self-contained, or stand-alone in nature. It is very rarely ever referring to literal monsters of the weekâŠexcept when talking about Buffy the Vampire Slayer, where the term was popularized. Buffy featured a mixture of season-long arcs as well as self-contained episodes. However, the seriesâ âMonster of the Weekâ episodes included some of the best outings of the showâs seven season run. Here are five of our favorites.
âBuffy vs. Draculaâ (Season 5, Episode 1)
âBuffy vs. Draculaâ is one of the many examples of Buffy, as a show, having maximum fun. Its premise is as simple and as ludicrous as the title suggests; Buffy goes face to face with Dracula. The episode jubilantly brings out all of the classic Dracula tropes, just to turn them on their head; Xander being made Draculaâs âbutt-monkeyâ due to falling under his âthrall;â Dracula living in a âbig honkingâ castle that was heretofore never seen or noticed by any of the characters in Sunnydale; and, of course, Draculaâs signature trio of sirens putting Giles in aâŠprecarious position. Sure, itâs all just sweet-tooth stuff, but it made for a ridiculously good time!
 âA New Manâ (Season 4, Episode 12)
âA New Manâ focuses on Buffyâs surrogate father figure, Rupert Giles. The catch being that the Monster of the Week is Giles, himself. After an old sorcerer frenemy casts a spell on the erstwhile Watcher, he is transformed into a hideous demon, who canât communicate with anyone and no one wants around. Well, except fellow creature of the night, Spike (whom he hates). This, of course, parallels his characterâs progression at the time, feeling more and more useless as Buffy grows into a college woman. Itâs not the most subtle of metaphors, but it expertly deals with complex emotions with a strong and even hand. Not to mention that the episode is effectively heartfelt and completely hilarious.

 âNormal Againâ (Season 6, Episode 17)
âNormal Againâ flirts with the idea that everything Buffy (and we) know is a lie. After being stung by a demon she was hunting, Buffy begins having hallucinations that she is ânormal girlâ Buffy Summers, and has simply been in a mental institution this whole time. The characters we have come to know and love have been figments of her elaborate delusions. Basically, the series threatened to go full St. Elsewhere on us, and many people were not happyâneither with the possibility, nor the pointless implication. Of course, it all amounted to nothing. Regardless, though, âNormal Againâ is a damn compelling hour of television, with Sarah Michelle Gellar shining in essentially dual, pained roles.

 âThe Zeppoâ (Season 3, Episode 13)
Deliberately exploring a side story, âThe Zeppoâ spends most of its time beating down the put-upon Alexander Harris. When it does so, all the way down to his most lovable insides through humiliation and degradation, he is able to discover his self-worth in surprisingly convincing and poignant fashion. Xander-centric episodes never did seem to tie into any given Buffy seasonâs main narrative all that much. And God bless them for it. âThe Zeppoâ is special, though, because (while very funny) it is concerned much more with humanizing the goof that is Xander, and succeeds in spades.

 âHushâ (Season 4, Episode 10)
One of the most lauded and innovative episodes of Buffyâs entire run, âHushâ not only proves to be the showâs best Monster of the Week episode, but easily one of its best episodes, period. When Sunnydale is under siege by a group of the creepiest goddamn demons of all time, The Gentlemen, the entire town literally loses the ability to speak. Written and directed by series creator and mastermind Joss Whedon, âHushâ boasts an impressively creative sense humor that only props up the episodeâs more incisive comments on communication (or lack thereof) with those most important to us. âHushâ is a rich, clever blend of brilliance, gore, beauty and terror.
